Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
she paralysed with shock—or merely brooding on some terrible revenge?
The days stole away and crept into weeks. Still she did nothing. She
went about her court with her pale face inscrutable beneath its flamboyant
wig, apparently totally preoccupied by the news which was carried to her
daily from the Lord Treasurer’s house in the Strand.
And the word ran round in a shocked whisper that Lord Burghley lay
on his deathbed at last.
t t t
The Queen of England sat beside the canopied bed in the sunlit Strand
and faithfully fed her chief minister with a spoon.
She was not very good at it, Burghley observed, with detached affec-
tion. The spoon mounted from the bowl to his sunken lips with frenetic
speed, as though she felt life dripping slowly out of him and was desperate
to fill him with nourishment. So might she attempt to fill a cracked vessel,
working desperately against time.
He lifted his arm at length to stay her busy hand.
“Madam, let it rest.”
“But you must eat,” she insisted, a trifle wildly. “You will never get
well unless you eat.”
“My dear,” he said gently, “you deceive yourself. Everyone in this
kingdom knows that I am at my last end. Why will you not accept it?”
The spoon halted, wavered, and found its way tremulously back into
the bowl. Tears welled up in her eyes and threatened to fall against her
will and he saw with anxiety their sudden glisten.
“I am old and my time is done,” he murmured. “If you will mourn my
unworthy person, then I pray you, madam—let it be with moderation.”
So he thought of Leicester even now. She forced herself to smile faintly.
“Don’t worry, my friend—I shall be your very merry widow.”
They were silent a moment, struggling respectively for composure. At
last she said with studied lightness, “They say King Philip, too, lies on his
deathbed. You should go down to Hell together—my best friend and my
best enemy. You see—I always said I would outlive you all. Sometimes I
think I shall live forever.”
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Legacy
She frowned; evidently the prospect displeased her. Burghley groped
for her hand.
“You will live in the hearts of men as long as England endures.”
“And you,” she retorted swiftly, “are a forward old flatterer, like the
rest of them.”
But he knew she did not seriously believe that, and he was not concerned.
Flattery was something to which their relationship had never sunk.
Suddenly she said with angry despair, “You shall not die. I forbid it.
What shall I do without you?”
He bit his quivering lip and looked away.
“There is my son,” he managed to say at length.
“Oh, yes, your precious son!” She glanced at him shrewdly through
her tears. “Are you quite sure Mildred never cuckolded you with that
one? If I didn’t know better, I’d say he was Walsingham’s—cold as cod-
fish! He doesn’t care for me over much, does he?”
“He—” Burghley floundered forwords, “he was always—
reserved
, even
as a child. Sensitive about his physical limitations. And I fear, madam, that
to call him your
Pygmy—
”
“Good God,” breathed the Queen, “did he think I referred to
that?
Then he is even more stupid than I thought.”
“Stupid!” bridled the loyal father. “
Stupid
, madam?”
“He suffers by comparison,” said the Queen smoothly. “Beside you
any man would seem a dwarf.”
Burghley coughed to hide his confused emotions. It was a full
minute before he had recovered himself sufficiently to tell her his son
could be trusted.
She lifted his swollen hand to her lips and kissed it gently.
“In all my life I have trusted no man save you—”
And Leicester! he added silently.
“Yes,” she continued softly, exactly as though he had spoken the
thought aloud, “and him. Must you still resent that all these years after
his death?”
“You loved him!” It was an accusation.
She looked down at the coverlet.
“Then it was true,” he said brokenly. “All those years—you and he—”
She shook her head slowly and Burghley dragged himself upright
against the pillows, staring at her in breathless anticipation.
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“It was said to hurt you, William, didn’t you guess that? No man may
strike me without receiving double the blow in return. Oh, my Spirit, do
I seem like a woman who has known the joys of love?”
That small, grim touch of self-deprecation convinced him as no sworn
oath could have done. When he thought how she treated young lovers,
he wondered how he could ever have missed the truth. A bitter old
maid—everything she said and did supported that image! And slowly tears
of joy began to roll down his withered face.
It was a small enough lie to buy the happiness of a dying man, a little
worthwhile perjury which she would not regret. For now, sitting here
at his deathbed, as she had done day after day, adjusting his pillows and
feeding him with her own hand, she found she could not do enough for
him. There was so little time left in which to distil a lifetime’s love and
gratitude; and this was one man who must not die without knowing how
much she cared.
She said kindly, “Your son’s worth is not wasted on me. I shall see him
advanced as far as you could ever wish.”
“Madam,” he murmured incoherently, “you are gracious beyond all
my hopes—and loyalty will be your reward, I swear it.”
“Loyalty,” she repeated darkly. “Oh yes, they’re all very loyal, these
rising young men who can’t wait for me to drop dead—about as loyal
as that wild beast mooning at Wanstead! And there’s a pretty piece of
devotion to comfort my old age.” She brushed her hand across her eyes,
as though to push back the hideous memory. “He’s grown beyond me,
Burghley, like a wilful, destructive child baiting its mother. Why did he
have to come into my life when I’m too old to handle him? What in
God’s name am I to do with him?”
“The insolent lout should be flogged to death for the outrage!”
muttered the old man with feeling.
She smiled bitterly and laid her hand on his shoulder.
“One does not flog heroes to death, my gentle dotard. And that is his
strength if he chooses to make a stand on it. The love of the people—how
well I know the power that it brings.”
“The people are ignorant fools and knaves,” began Burghley hotly.
“The people are bored,” she said shrewdly. “Peace and prosperity are
well enough for a few decades, but now they are restless for novelty,
for deeds that fire the imagination and bring warmth to dull lives. War,
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adventure, spectacle—Essex stands for all this, and the people love him
for it.”
“Madam, he is a danger to you and to all of England. Cut him down
while there is still time.”
Cut him down…
She got up abruptly and walked away to the window, where an angry
bee was beating itself stupidly against the mullioned panes. Idly, she
picked up a book and began to guide the frenzied insect towards the
open casement.
“This way, you stupid creature,” she muttered in mounting annoy-
ance at its panicking perversity. “Can’t you see I’m trying to help you?”
Suddenly, without warning, the bee stung her, and in a rage at its
monstrous ingratitude she flung the book at it. The heavy volume struck
the window and fell to the floor, leaving the bee squashed on the narrow
leaded pane, blood and guts oozing from the tail.
Her anger died as suddenly as it had flared and left her trembling as
she looked at her handiwork. Unnecessary violence! It would have died
of the sting anyway—died without her angry, helping hand. It might
have been Essex’s mangled body, splattered across the window of public
imagination, blotting out the glory of her reign beneath a monstrous
smear of blood. And that she did not want at any cost.
For a long time she stared out over the river, seeking a grave deep
enough to swallow his shining reputation and bury it for ever. And at
length she found one.
Ireland…
No Englishman had ever made his fortune there; no military post
was more unsought than that of Lord Deputy. She would send Essex to
Ireland at the first plausible opportunity, and perhaps, if God was kind to
them both, he would not come back alive.
She turned, at last, to tell Burghley what she had decided and found
that he had fallen asleep. She went back to the bed and looked down at
the man who had been like a father to her, bent, and laid her lips against
his forehead, gently, so as not to disturb him. Then she collected her
gloves and the lady-in-waiting who dozed in the next room, and took
her barge back to the palace.
She did not see Burghley’s last quavering letter to his son Robert,
which lauded her to the heavens for being “so careful a nurse” to him.
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Nor did she read its hammerblow of a postscript which hit the suave
and sophisticated little Secretary squarely between the eyes, making him
pause uneasily, as though he felt the warning presence of his father still
at his side.
“
Serve God by serving the Queen, for all other service is bondage to the Devil
!”
Remember it…
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Chapter 4
I
will not do it,” said essex belligerently. “not for you or any
other living soul. Christ’s soul, Mother, how can you ask me to
abase myself in such a fashion? I tell you this, Leicester may have crept
back to her, whining like a whipped cur, but I’m damned if I’ll do the
same. She behaved abominably, like a—like a fishwife! And if you think
I’m going to accept such treatment from the hands of any woman—”
“The Queen is not
any
woman,” countered Lettice, with angry
desperation. “For God’s sake, Robert, you’re talking of your prince!”
“So?” He lifted his arrogant shoulders. “Can’t princes err, then? Can’t
subjects receive any wrong? Is her earthly power infinite?”
Lettice cast a wary glance at the door. His voice was loud and she
could not vouch for the discretion of every servant in her house.
“Be silent,” she said hoarsely. “Your thoughts are too perilous for words.”
“She
struck
me, Mother!”
“Oh, Lord, if that’s all,” sighed Lettice wearily. “And for that you
draw your sword on her and put your life at risk. You stupid, stupid boy!”
Suddenly he put out one arm and pulled her roughly to the shelter of
his doublet.
“Mother—don’t weep. You know I can’t bear to see you weep.”
“Then don’t give me such cause!” she sobbed.
“You puff this out of all proportion,” he said reasonably. “If she was
going to send me to the Tower, she’d have done it by now.”
He paused and stared ahead fixedly, at some new grievance of thought,
suddenly come to light.
Susan Kay
“You don’t think—you don’t suppose for one moment that she can
have
forgotten
about me?”
Lettice wiped her eyes and sat down by the hearth.
“They say she is so crushed by Burghley’s death that she cares for little
else but mourning at the moment. That’s all I know—make what you
will of it.”
“She
has
forgotten me!” Essex clenched his fist convulsively. “Am I of
so little account to her that a dead man can oust me from her mind? Am
I to compete with a doddering ghost for her attention?”
“Be glad of it,” said Lettice shrewdly. “Grief is the only thing that
makes her vulnerable—you’ll never have a better opportunity to make
your peace with her. Robert, I’m asking—no—I’m
begging
you to lower
your insane pride for once. Admit your fault humbly on your knees and I
swear she’ll welcome you back with open arms. Swallow your arrogance,
or, I warn you—the next blow she gives you will be a mortal one.”
He turned away abruptly, riven with internal conflict.
“If I go back now and grovel,” he began slowly, “it will appear I do so
for profit—purely for what I can get out of her. And it’s not like that. It’s
never been like that.” He made an impatient gesture. “You can’t begin
to understand what I feel for her.”
A dark, resentful look crossed Lettice’s face.
“You think not?” Her voice was suddenly ugly with emotion. “You
think I was ten years wed to Leicester without learning anything of what
makes that woman function? The Queen destroys every man she sets
her eyes upon. If you love me, Robert—if there’s an ounce of pity in
your soul—don’t break my heart by letting her do to you what she did
to Leicester.”
“I won’t be compared with Leicester,” he said contemptuously. “I am
the only man in the country who has ever dared to stand up to her. If you
only knew how she respects me for that—how she despises the spineless
creep-mice who surround her.
Little men
!—how many times have I heard
her say that? Don’t you see? I can be the only master she has ever had! All